Another Torture Debate

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In other words, if it’s ok to kill someone to prevent a harm to innocents, why wold it be prohibited to harm someone to prevent a harm to innocents?
Because until you have tortured someone you have no idea that they are guilty or that they have any information that could be useful…

On the other hand, self-defense does not have this problem… It is very easy to see who is killing/attacking you…
 
This was already discussed self defense has a different intent. Self defense is force to subdue an eminent danger
As with terrorism as I describe in the OP. (Note that a just war will include very indirect attacks as for example when a factory is bombed that supplies ball bearings.)
 
As with terrorism as I describe in the OP. (Note that a just war will include very indirect attacks as for example when a factory is bombed that supplies ball bearings.)
A ball bearing factory cannot pose an eminent threat
 
Because until you have tortured someone you have no idea that they are guilty or that they have any information that could be useful…
You are still thinking in terms of torture to extract confession. The most common example of interrogation is of a terrorist captured in battle and the knowledge that he has is of the organization (e.g. who are his contacts, where do they meet, what are their current objectices, etc.). Then there are the ticking time bomb situations in which terrorists often are boastful of what’s coming.
On the other hand, self-defense does not have this problem… It is very easy to see who is killing/attacking you…
It’s far from flawless, innocent people are often harmed, but the better analogy is war in which innocents are often killed, sometimes when the wrong target is bombed.
 
And, yet, it is a legimiate target in war if it is supporting the war effort of the enemy.
from CC 2309
*- the damage inflicted by the aggressor on the nation or community of nations must be lasting, grave, and certain;
  • all other means of putting an end to it must have been shown to be impractical or ineffective;
  • there must be serious prospects of success;
  • the use of arms must not produce evils and disorders graver than the evil to be eliminated.
The power of modern means of destruction weighs very heavily in evaluating this condition.*

So just war doctrines are violated, because the torture may produce no results, or no useful results. It creates a greater evil than it conquers. Better means than torture are always available.
 
from CC 2309…
This is all pretty consistent with just war theory. Note that it does not state that each individual act within a war must be certain of effectiveness. The fact that an artillery barrage might miss the intended military target and hit innocent civilians does not make it an immoral act.
So just war doctrines are violated, because the torture may produce no results, or no useful results. It creates a greater evil than it conquers. Better means than torture are always available.
If the practice of torture is a) designed to be effective for the prevention of future harm and b) is found to be generally effective in preventing future harm then it would be consistent with just war theory even if it occassionally failed to be effective.

Unfortuantely, better means than torture are not always available. And this may become increasingly the case with the advent of terrorism as a more common method of warfare.
 
So just war doctrines are violated, because the torture may produce no results, or no useful results. It creates a greater evil than it conquers. Better means than torture are always available.
Oh, the old “due process” thingy… I guess for you it would be fine and dandy if hundreds or possibly even thousands of innocent civilians died…because a terrorist didn’t get a public defender and the system was bogged down for months.

I’d love to see you pander than off as a valid principle to even just one of the people who lost loved ones on 9/11. I’m sure they’ll sign up with the ACLU tomorrow…

One of the failures in your argument Texas Roofer,is that you have never “defined” torture, and you are apparently unaware of the fact that it is not necessary to “torture” someone to get information…
 
This is all pretty consistent with just war theory. Note that it does not state that each individual act within a war must be certain of effectiveness. The fact that an artillery barrage might miss the intended military target and hit innocent civilians does not make it an immoral act.
? Paragraph 2309 “is all pretty consistent with just war theory.” ??
If the practice of torture is a) designed to be effective for the prevention of future harm and b) is found to be generally effective in preventing future harm then it would be consistent with just war theory even if it occasionally failed to be effective.
as in an “eye for eye” your torture will be answered by your opponents torture, which will of course be answered by more torture, and on and on.
Unfortunately, better means than torture are not always available. And this may become increasingly the case with the advent of terrorism as a more common method of warfare.
All alternatives are better to include doing nothing.
 
FYI - The war is in Iraq the killers were from Saudi Arabia, btw the Saudi’s did not get along well with the Iraq government.
 
This Is What Separates Church & State. Sometimes A Govt. Makes A Decision To Protect The People At Large. Of Course Torture Violates Any Doctrine On Human Dignity. This Decision Is Not Without Ramification. If The Person Ordering The Torture Is Making It For The Country, I Think That Person Must Agree That They Accept The Consequences That It Is A Mortal Sin. That’s All. The Problem With Bush & Cheney Is They Cannot Accept That They Are Fallible & Capable Of Committing A Mortal Sin. That’s What I Mean By Conscience. Bush & Cheney Could Never Admit That Is Against God’s Doctrine For They Are Afraid Of Personal Shame From The Public. But I Think That Refusal To Be Honest About It Will Be Revisited By A Higher Power Who Will Hold Them Accountable. All Yous Had To Say Was That We Accept Our Fallability In Allowing This Act & Clearly The Order Came From Above. The Actual Personnel Used–you Can’t Use The Nurembourg Defense Either As An Excuse But Their Role Of Accountability Is Less Severe Than The Leadership. In Sum The Ends Does Not Justify The Means. The Whole Problem Is That People With Power Are Too Shallow To Admit That They Are Intentionally & Of Free Will Committing A Vile Act. If They Can Do So Without Qualm, Then They Have No Conscience. Good Luck Then In Purgatory. If They Personal Shame & Qualms, Then It Shows They Have Some Conscience & Are Clearly Struggling With The Issue Because God Is Watching.
 
I think this is a legitimate point but it is orthogonal to the definition of purpose. One can imagine a four way matrix along the two axis: harshness and purpose.
Your objection is valid up to a point in that a theoretical debate about the morality of torture can be resolved without actually saying anything of much practical application. Even if we agreed that torture was in all cases immoral we won’t have agreed that (e.g.) waterboarding is wrong.

I am ambivalent on the use of torture. More specifically, I am unsure of what the Church says about it. On the one hand I recognize its usefulness in the ticking time bomb scenario and question neither its effectiveness nor that it could save innumerable lives. On the other hand, if torture is itself intrinsically evil then it cannot be used - so the question is: is it intrinsically evil? (And once we answer this question we’ll need to address the problem of defining torture.)

Ender
 
Your objection is valid up to a point in that a theoretical debate about the morality of torture can be resolved without actually saying anything of much practical application. Even if we agreed that torture was in all cases immoral we won’t have agreed that (e.g.) waterboarding is wrong.
Right. It may be, for example, that there are techniques that are unpleasant but which cause no permanant harm. They might not qualify as torture simply because they are merely unpleasant but still sufficient to extract the information.

So there is a legimiate question as to where you draw the line. One could imagine that, in a serious dialog (which is often absent) the Church might issue a definition that drew that line in a way that allowed for effective intelligence gathering from known members of terrorist organizations.

That said, I think that the issue of purpose is the one that caught my attention when I read it on Ask An Apologist. It struck me that the Church teaching on torture was not explicitly prohibiting the extraction of information to prevent future harm (in contrast to the UN charter which does).
I am ambivalent on the use of torture. More specifically, I am unsure of what the Church says about it. On the one hand I recognize its usefulness in the ticking time bomb scenario and question neither its effectiveness nor that it could save innumerable lives. On the other hand, if torture is itself intrinsically evil then it cannot be used - so the question is: is it intrinsically evil? (And once we answer this question we’ll need to address the problem of defining torture.)
We should probably all be ambivalent.

I read somewhere the distinction between mormative prohibitions and absolute prohibtions. It may be that the ban on torture, even for extracting information to prevent future harm, should be normatively prohibited, meaning except in extreme circumstances, rather than absolutely prohibited, meaning without exception.

The underlying question really is: what is evil? Abortion, for example, is intrinsicly evil but execution is not and the normal distinction is that babies are innocent and those sentenced to be executed are not. So even if the Church would prefer that states not execute criminals (for various reasons), it stops short of declaring it to be an intrinsic evil.
 
I think that the issue of purpose is the one that caught my attention when I read it on Ask An Apologist. It struck me that the Church teaching on torture was not explicitly prohibiting the extraction of information to prevent future harm (in contrast to the UN charter which does).
If torture is wrong in every case then the way to state that is to say “torture is wrong.” Once you start with “torture is wrong in these cases …” it certainly opens the door to the question of whether it is wrong in those cases not specified. No one tries to list the cases where abortion is not allowed because there are no situations where it is allowed.
I read somewhere the distinction between mormative prohibitions and absolute prohibtions.
I think this is the question of whether torture is intrinsically evil. If it is then that is an absolute prohibition but if it is not intrinsically evil then there are cases where it could be used and the ticking time bomb is probably just such a situation. This brings up an interesting dilemma: the next time you watch a WWII movie where the Nazis are about to torture the local resistance fighter to learn where he planted his ticking time bomb let me know what you’re thinking about the justness of their actions.

Ender
 
If torture is wrong in every case then the way to state that is to say “torture is wrong.” Once you start with “torture is wrong in these cases …” it certainly opens the door to the question of whether it is wrong in those cases not specified. No one tries to list the cases where abortion is not allowed because there are no situations where it is allowed.
Not necessarily so. I have read that there are exceptions, such as to protect the life of the mother wherein the specific intent is not to destroy the child… I can’t find the source, but it is an extreme exception.
I think this is the question of whether torture is intrinsically evil. If it is then that is an absolute prohibition but if it is not intrinsically evil then there are cases where it could be used and the ticking time bomb is probably just such a situation. This brings up an interesting dilemma: the next time you watch a WWII movie where the Nazis are about to torture the local resistance fighter to learn where he planted his ticking time bomb let me know what you’re thinking about the justness of their actions.
Ender, I think that the use of Nazi’s as an illustration is invalid. It can easily be presumed that since the Nazi’s would be freely considered “intrinsically evil”, anything less than surrender on their part would be wrong.

Put the situation in another frame:

There is direct and compelling information that Mr. X has information of a specific nature of the where and when a dirty nuclear device is planted and when it will detonate in a major city. That city is in a country that is not “intrinsically evil”, nor are its people. They are being attacked by terrorists and the targets are not military but instead an innocent civilian population.

In this scenario…“intense interrogation” of the subject would be warranted. I don’t mean fingernail pulling or beating. I would think that “chemical inducements” would be just fine. And the use of some serious “intimidation” would be in order as well.

To state that torture is immoral, etc, is far too broad of a statement… the definition of exactly what torture is …is absolutely necessary. Is “intense interrogation” torture, is mental intimidation torture, or is it physical beatings and the infliction of immense pain that is torture?

I will state this: While physical torture may be immoral and sinful, I think that total abdication of public responsibility under the guise of “due process” and other guises to keep ones hands clean…when the net effect of those acts results in the deaths of many innocents is the greater sin…

One can bandy about all kind of spiritualisms where these subjects are concerned, and they are wonderful when one is not directly involved…but then you cannot do so without also making inclusions in other areas.

If one is to be a detractor of the use of certain methods to obtain information that would save the lives of innocents… then one cannot in any way shape of fashion support the use of arms in defense of a nation even in a just war. Why? Because, to support the concept of just war is to support the direct sending of soldiers and seamen to their deaths with wilfulness.

I believe it was Churchill who said: Thank God for those who are willing to do what we are not.

Let me reiterate: I do not embrace physical torture that damages the party. I have no problem with extraction of information by other means however. And I will even go far as to say that the existence of one who has knowledge that will save the many, is of little consequence in the grander scheme of it all.

“Omniscience” is of no import…as it is non-existent in man. Man has to work with what he has at hand. Failure to use what is at hand is as much a sin as possibly breaching the line.
 
It struck me that the Church teaching on torture was not explicitly prohibiting the extraction of information to prevent future harm (in contrast to the UN charter which does).
The UN charter is a complete whitewash of reality. Those dolts have sat on their hands for years while genocide has been committed in various parts of the world…and done absolutely NOTHING!
We should probably all be ambivalent.
Then we are truly lost in the woods! Here is the definition of the word “ambivalence”:
Code:
am·biv·a·lence Listen to the pronunciation of ambivalence
Pronunciation:
\am-ˈbi-və-lən(t)s\
Function:
noun
Etymology:
International Scientific Vocabulary
Date:
1918

1: simultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings (as attraction and repulsion) toward an object, person, or action

2 a: continual fluctuation (as between one thing and its opposite) b: uncertainty as to which approach to follow.

To be “ambivalent” is to waffle back and forth conveniently or foolishly…never taking a concrete stand on an issue.
 
The UN charter is a complete whitewash of reality. Those dolts have sat on their hands for years while genocide has been committed in various parts of the world…and done absolutely NOTHING!
Believe me, I’m not favoring the opinion of the UN. Merely pointing out (as someone else did previously) that the UN has, and the CC has not, explicitly forbidden torture for the purpose of gathering intelligence (to prevent future harm). I find it very hard to believe that those who drafted the CC teaching were not aware of this use of torture and thus that they intentionally did not claim it to be intrinsicly evil. That doesn’t mean it isn’t, only that the CC has not decided the matter, yet.
Here is the definition of the word “ambivalence”: …To be “ambivalent” is to waffle back and forth conveniently or foolishly…never taking a concrete stand on an issue.
What I meant (obviously?) was that even if torture is permisible for the purpose preventing future harm we should find it repugnant nonetheless. We should be suspicious of anyone who might express enthusiasm for torture.
 
To be “ambivalent” is to waffle back and forth conveniently or foolishly…never taking a concrete stand on an issue.
As per the first definition you posted, the word can mean that one sees good and bad things about something – not necessarily a bad thing.
 
Not necessarily so. I have read that there are exceptions, such as to protect the life of the mother wherein the specific intent is not to destroy the child… I can’t find the source, but it is an extreme exception.
There is no exception per se. Abortion is intrinsically evil and can never be justifiable. In the case of ectopic pregnancies, however, the fallopian tube may be removed to save the life of the mother, thus indirectly (key word) causing the death of the child. This is not technically abortion (the child is not directly harmed and the harm caused is regrettable) and is justified under the principle of double effect.
 
I don’t need to check church doctrine on this one, and I never will do so. When I was 4 years old and in kindergarten, and saw other kids picking on another kid, they always had a good excuse. I knew it was an excuse. I knew it was an excuse because I see in my own nature a strong, sensual desire to get pleasure from anothers suffering. Is there any wine sweeter than watching a little girl cry?
No, they pick on the other kid for the FUN of it.

No ambiguity AT ALL.
 
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